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1 over
over [ˈəʊvər]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb2. adjective3. preposition4. noun5. modifier━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb► to have sb over ( = invite) inviter qn chez soib. ( = there) làc. ( = above) dessusd. (with adverb/preposition)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When followed by an adverb or a preposition, over is not usually translated.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━e. ( = more) plusf. ( = in succession) he did it five times over il l'a fait cinq fois de suite• William played the same tune over and over again William a joué le même air je ne sais combien de fois• I got bored doing the same thing over and over again je m'ennuyais à refaire toujours la même choseg. ( = remaining) there are three over il en reste troish. (on two-way radio) over! à vous !• over and out! terminé !2. adjective( = finished) after the war was over après la guerre3. preposition━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When over occurs in a set combination, eg over the moon, an advantage over, look up the noun. When over is used with a verb such as jump, trip, step, look up the verb.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. ( = on top of) surb. ( = above) au-dessus dec. ( = across) de l'autre côté ded. ( = during) over the summer pendant l'étéf. ( = more than) plus de• spending has gone up by 7% over and above inflation les dépenses ont augmenté de 7 %, hors inflation• over and above the fact that... sans compter que...h. ( = while having) they chatted over a cup of coffee ils ont bavardé autour d'une tasse de caféi. ( = recovered from)► to be over sth [+ illness, bad experience] s'être remis de qch4. noun5. modifier* * *Note: over is used after many verbs in English ( change over, fall over, lean over etc). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (change, fall, lean etc)over is often used with another preposition in English (to, in, on) without altering the meaning. In this case over is usually not translated in French: to be over in France = être en France; to swim over to somebody = nager vers quelqu'unover is often used with nouns in English when talking about superiority ( control over etc) or when giving the cause of something ( concern over, worries over etc). For translations, consult the appropriate noun entry (control, concern, worry etc)over is often used as a prefix in verb combinations ( overeat), adjective combinations ( overconfident) and noun combinations ( overcoat). These combinations are treated as headwords in the dictionary['əʊvə(r)] 1.1) ( across the top of) par-dessusover here/there — par ici/là
3) ( above) au-dessus de4) (covering, surrounding) gen sur5) ( physically higher than)6) ( more than) plus detemperatures over 40° — des températures supérieures à 40°
7) ( in the course of)8) ( recovered from)to be over — s'être remis de [illness, operation]
9) ( by means of)10) ( everywhere)2.over and above prepositional phrase3.adjective, adverb2) ( finished)to be over — [term, meeting] être terminé; [war] être fini
3) ( more)4) ( remaining)5) (to one's house, country)to invite ou ask somebody over — inviter quelqu'un
6) Radio, Television7) ( showing repetition)I had to do it over — US j'ai dû recommencer
I've told you over and over (again)... — je t'ai dit je ne sais combien de fois...
8) GB ( excessively) -
2 hand over
hand over to [somebody] Television, Radio passer l'antenne à [reporter]; passer la main à [deputy, successor]; ( on telephone)hand over [something], hand [something] over rendre [weapon]; céder [territory, title, business]; transmettre [power]; remettre [keys, money]; hand [somebody] over, hand over [somebody] ( transfer) livrer [prisoner]; confier [child, patient] -
3 knock over
knock [somebody/something] over, knock over [somebody/something] renverser -
4 throw over
(colloq) GBthrow over [somebody], throw [somebody] over laisser tomber (colloq) -
5 win over
win over [somebody], win [somebody] over convaincre -
6 come over
1) ( drop in) venir2) ( travel) venir3) ( convey impression) [message] passer; [feelings, love] transparaîtreto come over very well — [person] donner une très bonne impression
to come over as — donner l'impression d'être [lazy, honest]
4) (colloq) ( suddenly become)come over [somebody] [feeling] envahir -
7 all over
[ˌɔːl'əʊvə(r)] 1. 2.1) ( everywhere) partout2) (colloq) ( typically)3.1) partout dans [room, town]2) (colloq) fig ( known in)3) ( fawning over) -
8 walk over
walk over ( a few steps) s'approcher (to de); ( a short walk) faire un saut (colloq) (to à); walk over [somebody] (colloq) ( humiliate) marcher sur les pieds de -
9 hang over
hang over [somebody/something] [threat, suspicion] planer sur [person, project] -
10 stand over
stand over [somebody] être sur le dos de (colloq) [employee etc] -
11 watch over
watch over [somebody/something] veiller sur [person]; veiller à [interests, rights, welfare] -
12 run over
1) [meeting, programme] se prolonger2) ( overflow) déborderrun over [something] ( run through) passer [quelque chose] en revue [arrangements]; run over [something/somebody], run [something/somebody] over4) ( drive over) passer sur [bump] -
13 turn over
1) ( roll over) [person, vehicle] se retourner2) ( turn page) tourner la page3) [engine] se mettre en marcheturn [something/somebody] over, turn over [something/somebody]4) ( turn) tourner [page, paper]; retourner [card, object, mattress, soil, patient]5) ( hand over) remettre [object, money, find, papers]; livrer [person] (to à); remettre la succession de [company]; transmettre [control, power]6) ( reflect)7) (colloq) GB ( rob) cambrioler [shop, place]8) Finance ( have turnover of) faire un chiffre d'affaires de [amount] -
14 change over
change over ( swap) [drivers] changerchange over [something/somebody], change [something/somebody] over intervertir -
15 push over
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16 move over
1) se pousser2) fig céder la place ( for somebody à quelqu'un)move [somebody/something] over déplacer [person, object] -
17 get over
1) ( cross) traverser2) se remettre de [illness, shock]I can't get over it — ( in amazement) je n'en reviens pas
3) surmonter [problem]get [somebody/something] over faire passer [quelqu'un/quelque chose] au-dessus de [bridge, wall etc] -
18 pass over
pass over [something] ne pas tenir compte de -
19 going-over
(colloq) [ˌgəʊɪŋ'əʊvə(r)] noun (pl goings-over)1) ( examination) (of vehicle, machine) révision f; ( of document) vérification f; ( cleaning) (of room, house) nettoyage m2)to give somebody a going-over — ( beat up) rouer quelqu'un de coups
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20 look over
look [somebody] over passer [quelqu'un] en revue; look [something] over examiner [car, animal]; look over2) ( visit) visiter [factory, gardens]
См. также в других словарях:
Over Somebody Else's Shoulder — is a hit song written by Al Sherman Al Lewis in 1934 at the end of the Tin Pan Alley era. It was introduced by singer and bandleader, Ozzie Nelson who enjoyed great success with the song. It was further covered by Freddy Martin and his Orchestra… … Wikipedia
come over somebody — ˌcome ˈover sb derived no passive to affect sb • A fit of dizziness came over her. • I can t think what came over me (= I do not know what caused me to behave in that way) … Useful english dictionary
crouch over somebody — ˈcrouch over sb/sth derived to bend over sb/sth so that you are very close to them or it • He crouched over the papers on his desk. Main entry: ↑crouchderived … Useful english dictionary
fall over somebody — ˌfall ˈover sb/sth derived no passive to hit your foot against sth when you are walking and fall, or almost fall Syn: trip over • I rushed for the door and fell over the cat in the hallway. see also ↑fall … Useful english dictionary
hang over somebody — ˌhang ˈover sb derived if sth bad or unpleasant is hanging over you, you think about it and worry about it a lot because it is happening or might happen • The possibility of a court case is still hanging over her. Main entry: ↑hangderived … Useful english dictionary
close over somebody — ˌclose ˈover sb/sth derived to surround and cover sb/sth • The water closed over his head. Main entry: ↑closederived … Useful english dictionary
fuss over somebody — ˈfuss over sb derived to pay a lot of attention to sb • They love to fuss over their grandchildren. Main entry: ↑fussderived … Useful english dictionary
get over somebody — ˌget ˈover sth/sb derived to return to your usual state of health, happiness, etc. after an illness, a shock, the end of a relationship, etc • He was disappointed at not getting the job, but he ll get over it. Main entry: ↑getderived … Useful english dictionary
slobber over somebody — ˈslobber over sb/sth derived (informal, disapproving) to show how much you like or want sb/sth without any pride or control • I know he s fond of you but does he have to slobber over you in public? Main entry: ↑slobber … Useful english dictionary
stand over somebody — ˌstand ˈover sb derived be near sb and watch them • I don t like you standing over me while I m cooking. Main entry: ↑standderived … Useful english dictionary
moon over somebody — ˈmoon over sb derived (informal) to spend time thinking about sb that you love, especially when other people think this is silly or annoying Syn: pine for Main entry: ↑moonderived … Useful english dictionary